Focus on Athletes biographies are produced by the IAAF Communications Dept, and not by the IAAF Statistics and Documentation Division. If you have any enquiries concerning the information, please use the Contact IAAF page, selecting ‘Focus on Athletes Biographies’ in the drop down menu of contact area options.

Updated 27
July 2013

Zuzana
HEJNOVA, Czech Republic (400m Hurdles)

Born: 9 December
1986, Liberec

1.73m/61kg

Lives: Prague

Coach:
Dalibor Kupka

Club: Dukla
Prague (sports army club)

Hobbies:
skiing, snowboarding, travelling and golf

Web: www.hejnova.cz

Zuzana
Hejnova, who is called Lula or Zuza by her friends, started in athletics when
she was a pupil at the Basic school in Liberec. She was 12 years old and had an
idol within her family. Her older sister, Michaela, also did athletics and competed
in the Heptathlon at the 2004 Athens Olympics, finishing 26th.

The talented
girl, who admired her sister, competed for the athletic sports club, TJ Liaz
Jablonec nad Nisou, until 2006. She continued her study while being a
successful competitor at the Pedagogical High School, where she stayed for four
years from 2002. In 2006, she joined USK Prague athletics club and started to
attend university in Liberec, where she studied how to become an economist or a
manager. However, she still did not feel this was what she wanted to do in
future. Therefore, in 2008, she enrolled for the study of physiotherapy.

Hejnova
entered international level at the 2002 World Junior Championships, in
Kingston, where she achieved the best Czech placing, 5th in the 400m Hurdles
and setting her first national youth record (58.42). It was almost unbelievable
given that it was only the fourth 400m Hurdles race in her life.

In 2003,
Hejnova represented her country in the European Cup, First Division (57.78 for
4th) then back in her age category, in Sherbrooke, Canada, she achieved her
first gold, at the World Youth Championships, improving her national youth
record (57.54). In the same year, the athlete of coach Dana Jandova qualified
for the European Junior Championships in Tampere, Finland. There a tired
Hejnova took the bronze medal in 58.30.

The Olympic
year of 2004 also saw the staging of the World Junior Championships in
Grosseto, Italy. The Czech team took two medals – Denisa Scerbova’s gold in the
women’s Long Jump and Hejnova’s silver. Hejnova ran 57.44, a Czech junior
record. The next year, 2005, brought Hejnova a gold medal from the European
Junior Championships in Kaunas, Lithuania. Her time, 55.89, was also a national
junior record (already the third one that season), senior record and inside the
qualification mark needed for the World Championships in Helsinki.

However, 14
days later Alena Rucklova erased the record mark. Hejnova continued in her
preparation for Helsinki but, in the cold and wind, she was unable to progress
beyond the semi-finals, clocking 57.29.

The hurdler,
who likes skiing, snowboarding and golf, showed her versatility in athletics:
at the International Combined Events match in Prague on 11-12 February, she
placed fourth in a pentathlon field including top specialists with a PB of 4157
points. At the 2006 European Cup, in Prague, Hejnova regained the national
record, clocking 55.83. Later that year Hejnova was eliminated in the
semi-finals at the European Championships, in Göteborg (56.39).

In early
2007, Hejnova again kept herself busy with Combined Events during the winter.
She managed to win the Czech indoor title in Pentathlon at the beginning of
February 2007, scoring 4146 points. Her sister Michaela finished second on 4014
points. At the International match in Zaragoza just two weeks earlier, she had
placed 3rd with 4144 points, well ahead of her sister.

Come summer,
after placing second in the European Cup 1st Division (56.20), Zuzana gained a
bronze medal from the U23 European Championships in Debrecen, Hungary, but
despite recording 55.93, she was not satisfied with third place. “I believed I
could have run faster,” she said. “I was thinking of a time around 55.50.”

The young
Czech athlete, who also likes reading books, playing the piano and travelling,
qualified for the 400m Hurdles at the World Championships in Osaka.

The record
came at the end of August, in the Osaka semi-finals. “Finally, I got the
national record after waiting for it the whole season,” Hejnova wrote in her
diary. “In the first semi-final heat, despite the time of 55.04, I finished
only sixth and did not qualify. But I am very happy. I improved my PB by
0.79s.” At the beginning of the season she was thinking of a time on around
55.18, so she was surprised at the achievement. “Now I believe I am able to run
sub 55 seconds,” she said.

And she was
right. At the beginning of 2008, Hejnova first improved her indoor PB on 400m
flat to 52.82 in Prague, then she competed at the World Indoor Championships,
in Valencia, clocking 53.16 in the semi-finals of the 400m and helping the
Czech squad to her country’s best result at this championships, finishing 4th
with the women´s 4x400m.

On 12 June,
at the Golden Spike meeting in Ostrava, Hejnova achieved 54.96 and qualified for
the Olympics in Beijing in a national record.

The Olympic
400m hurdles were the consecration of the then 22-year-old Czech athlete. “I
really wanted to go to Beijing and during all that year I worked very hard to
get the flight ticket,” she stated. Zuzana Hejnova did not disappoint the Czech
team. In the final she finished seventh with 54.97, only one hundredth behind
her personal best of that time.

After a
successful summer season, the winter 2008-2009 brought some health problems.
Zuzana had to handle a tonsils operation, which ended with some other health
complications. After a training camp in South Africa, she returned to the
freezing Czech weather and turned sick again for a month. For all these
reasons, Hejnova did not have good indoor season 2009.

The fruits of
hard spring preparation and the first national record improvement in 2009 came
on 7 July at the IAAF GP in Lausanne. The time, 54.94, was 0.02s better than
the one achieved in 2008 in Ostrava. However, the next national record did not wait
long to come. Only three weeks after the Swiss meeting, Hejnova started at the Super
Grand Prix meeting in Monaco. The new Czech record mark was changed into 54.90,
despite the fact that Hejnova took “only” seventh place. “I think that if I had
better lane, not the first one, I would have run even faster,” the national
record breaker was quoted at the meeting. The paradox was that the multiple
Czech record holder did not have any national title from her event. “I will run
400 meters flat at the national championships. It is less tiring for me and
there is better competition on this event,” said the 400m hurdles specialist.

Despite the
fact that Zuzana broke the 55 seconds barrier in the semifinals of the World
Championships in Berlin for the third time in the season, she did not make it
into the final. She was fourth in her semi, 13 hundredths of a second from a
final spot. "What can I say? I'm very disappointed. I could have made it.
There was no need to run too fast. If I am aware of mistakes? Not really. I ran
well, smoothly, but slowly. I spoiled it for myself, it was a huge
chance," she regretted.

The year 2010
started with a successful return of the 400m relay at the World Indoor
Championships, in Doha. The Czech quartet (Rosolova, Bartonickova, Bergrova a
Hejnova) took fourth place again in 3:30.05, but because of doping in the
Jamaican medal team, they were later awarded the bronze. For Zuzana it was like
a substitute for the individual race, where she was the first behind the
qualification line in the heats with the time of 53.56 and overall finished 13th.

Her first big
chance for the senior (individual) medal was close, at the European
Championships in Barcelona, where she ended just off the podium, in fourth
place. Although she ran well and confirmed that times below 55 seconds are not
a problem for her anymore, even clocking the second-fastest time in her career,
54.30 - in the season she had improved to 54.13 NR already - was not enough for
the medal; she lost it by 12 hundredths. "I've run out of power at the
end. I'm sorry," she said after the race.

2010 however
was a positive year for Hejnova, who had her first strong season at
international level and took the second place in the Diamond League Standings
at her event. The same result came in the national polls for Athlete of the
year 2010.

During
winter, Zuzana used to choose the 400 meters flat as her additional event. In
2011, however, she seriously devoted her efforts to pentathlon. After her
success in the Four Nations match in Reims, where she was second only to French
specialist Antoinette Nana Djimou with 4406 points, she decided to participate
in the European Indoor Championships in the pentathlon.

In the first
three events she set personal bests, but in long jump she had two faults and
only in the third attempt recorded 5.73. The final seventh place, with the
total of 4453 points, meant a new PB again. "I will not specialise in
pentathlon and I admire the girls who do this event. I will again continue in
my hurdles," she laughed in the mixed zone.

In her first
start outdoors in 2011, on 4 June, the athlete coached at the time by Martina
Blazkova attacked her own national record (from 2010) running 54.26, just 13
hundredths slower, at the Diamond League meeting in Eugene, finishing in fourth
place. With this time she also easily qualified for the World Championships in
Daegu, Korea. The excellent performance from Eugene was followed by victory at
400m hurdles at the next Diamond League meeting in Oslo, on 9 June. Zuzana
clocked 54.38 and four days later, in Prague, she added the next victory,
achieving 54.44 at the Odlozil memorial.

Zuzana
Hejnova then showed one of the best performances within the Czech team at the
European Team Championships in Stockholm on 18 June, breaking the national
record with 53.87. "Actually I did not expect that today it could be so
good. I felt tired and sleepy. Natalya Antyukh started quickly, but I was
faster in the finish," said a happy Hejnova. Her previous record was
improved by 26 hundredths. "Now I'd like to stabilise my performance at
around 54 seconds, and if it should even fall down to 53.5, it would be very
good," she said.

It did not
take too long before Hejnova fulfilled her aims. In the French capital she won
the second race in a row within the Diamond League and improved her own
national best at 400m hurdles, achieving the then world leading mark of 53.29.
“My coach Martina Blazkova is here with me and my boyfriend and a few friends
too. It helped me a lot,” said the excited 24-year-old athlete on 8 July. “I
was very motivated and wanted to show them a great performance in Paris.”

Coming to
Daegu as a number two in the world rankings at that time (behind Jamaican Kaliese Spencer,
52.79), Hejnova hoped for a great result in Daegu.

Zuzana
managed to get to the final but was disappointed about the seventh place.
“Unfortunately, I was very tired in the last metres and could not speed up. To
be sixth or seventh – it is not a big difference,” the 24-year-old described
after running 54.23 in the World Championships final. She repeated the same
placement in the relays after the team of Rosolová, Bergrová, Bartoničková and
Hejnová took seventh place at 4x400m in 3:26.57.

Zuzana, whose
biggest sport hero is Allison Felix, decided to skip indoor competitions in
2012 to focus only on Olympic Games. Despite this fact, she took part in some
combined event competitions and won the national indoor title at 400 m.

In her first
outdoor competition, the Ostrava Golden Spike meeting on 25 May, Zuzana
fulfilled the Olympic standard to start at her second Olympic Games by running
55.28. The next success came on 11 June at the Odlozil Memorial in Prague where
she ran a new meet record, 54.43. “I am sure now I am on the right
way towards Olympics,” stated the 25-year-old athlete based in Prague.

But the big
disappointment came at the European Championships, in Helsinki, where Hejnova
had golden ambitions. She missed the bronze medal by 14 hundredths and the
silver went to her team mate, newborn hurdler, Denisa Rosolova. “It seems
I forgot how to run. I do not know what was going on. I trained
well; I feel well and still cannot perform well at the competition.
I hope I can break this spell in London,” she cried. A few days
later, she made her day by winning the next big bronze in 4x400 relay with her teammates,
all from the training group of Martina Blazkova - Zuzana Bergrova, Jitka
Bartoničkova and Denisa Rosolova. “I did not believe in a medal, so this is
just awesome,” Zuzana added.

The fourth
place from Helsinki was forgotten once Zuzana appeared at the Diamond League
meet in Monaco on 20 July, her last outing before leaving for the London
Olympics. She triumphed in a season best of 54.12 and improved her
self-confidence. “I did not manage it well in Helsinki. Mentally, I feel ready
now and first of all, I want to enjoy the Olympic Games in London and I am sure
I can surprise everyone,” Zuzana confessed.

In London,
she finally achieved her first medal from an individual event. In the final,
she finished third clocking 53.38 behind Natalya Antyukh and LaShinda Demus.
“It is almost unbelievable. Before, I even did not believe that I could win the
Olympic medal one day because everybody is so well prepared for the Olympics.
But here, I told to myself: It has to change finally; I should not have bad
luck anymore.”

After the
season, she left her coach Martina Blazkova and her sparing-partner Denisa
Rosolova for new club Dukla Praha and started cooperation with Dalibor Kupka, a
former coach of the Olympic champion in Decathlon, Roman Sebrle, and of the
European 400m champion Pavel Maslak. From the all-female training group she
moved to the group composed of only men. “I felt that I needed a change. Girls
are gossiping much more. With boys it is more fun during the training, we are a
bigger team,” she confessed and admitted that she has never been so
self-confident before. “Before, I went to the start with a fear and tied up. No
I just go there and I do not think about the words “must” or “must not”. I only
look forward to the competition.”

Training where
they experimented quite a lot with her former coach, changed to training with a
strict set program. And it bore its fruits in the form of her lifetime best
results under the leadership of coach Kupka. She won all eight competitions she
entered at 400m hurdles before the World Championships, including five Diamond
league meetings. “I deserve the best marks for the first half of the season,”
she praised herself. “It is because I did not lose any competition and for
every improvement of my personal best. But the certificate will be given only
after Moscow.”

She also improved
her own national record twice this year. The first time, at the Diamond League
in Paris, she improved to 53.23 and then in London on 26 June to 53.07. In the
IAAF Diamond League 2013 overall standings she sits on the first place without
any opponent anymore.

She leaves
for the IAAF World Championships in Moscow as the world´s fastest hurdler this
season and still claims: „I believe that I still spare the fastest time
for the Moscow competition.”

“Because of
athletics, I maybe lost some contacts with my friends but on the other hand,
sport gives me a good feeling about myself, it teaches me to be systematic and
increases my self-confidence. And because I like travelling, I am always
looking forward to every foreign trip. I wish I would visit Malaysia once more
and I would like to know Japan and China better,” the Czech record holder
confessed.

Focus on Athletes biographies are produced by the IAAF Communications Dept, and not by the IAAF Statistics and Documentation Division. If you have any enquiries concerning the information, please use the Contact IAAF page, selecting ‘Focus on Athletes Biographies’ in the drop down menu of contact area options.

Updated 27
July 2013

Zuzana
HEJNOVA, Czech Republic (400m Hurdles)

Born: 9 December
1986, Liberec

1.73m/61kg

Lives: Prague

Coach:
Dalibor Kupka

Club: Dukla
Prague (sports army club)

Hobbies:
skiing, snowboarding, travelling and golf

Web: www.hejnova.cz

Zuzana
Hejnova, who is called Lula or Zuza by her friends, started in athletics when
she was a pupil at the Basic school in Liberec. She was 12 years old and had an
idol within her family. Her older sister, Michaela, also did athletics and competed
in the Heptathlon at the 2004 Athens Olympics, finishing 26th.

The talented
girl, who admired her sister, competed for the athletic sports club, TJ Liaz
Jablonec nad Nisou, until 2006. She continued her study while being a
successful competitor at the Pedagogical High School, where she stayed for four
years from 2002. In 2006, she joined USK Prague athletics club and started to
attend university in Liberec, where she studied how to become an economist or a
manager. However, she still did not feel this was what she wanted to do in
future. Therefore, in 2008, she enrolled for the study of physiotherapy.

Hejnova
entered international level at the 2002 World Junior Championships, in
Kingston, where she achieved the best Czech placing, 5th in the 400m Hurdles
and setting her first national youth record (58.42). It was almost unbelievable
given that it was only the fourth 400m Hurdles race in her life.

In 2003,
Hejnova represented her country in the European Cup, First Division (57.78 for
4th) then back in her age category, in Sherbrooke, Canada, she achieved her
first gold, at the World Youth Championships, improving her national youth
record (57.54). In the same year, the athlete of coach Dana Jandova qualified
for the European Junior Championships in Tampere, Finland. There a tired
Hejnova took the bronze medal in 58.30.

The Olympic
year of 2004 also saw the staging of the World Junior Championships in
Grosseto, Italy. The Czech team took two medals – Denisa Scerbova’s gold in the
women’s Long Jump and Hejnova’s silver. Hejnova ran 57.44, a Czech junior
record. The next year, 2005, brought Hejnova a gold medal from the European
Junior Championships in Kaunas, Lithuania. Her time, 55.89, was also a national
junior record (already the third one that season), senior record and inside the
qualification mark needed for the World Championships in Helsinki.

However, 14
days later Alena Rucklova erased the record mark. Hejnova continued in her
preparation for Helsinki but, in the cold and wind, she was unable to progress
beyond the semi-finals, clocking 57.29.

The hurdler,
who likes skiing, snowboarding and golf, showed her versatility in athletics:
at the International Combined Events match in Prague on 11-12 February, she
placed fourth in a pentathlon field including top specialists with a PB of 4157
points. At the 2006 European Cup, in Prague, Hejnova regained the national
record, clocking 55.83. Later that year Hejnova was eliminated in the
semi-finals at the European Championships, in Göteborg (56.39).

In early
2007, Hejnova again kept herself busy with Combined Events during the winter.
She managed to win the Czech indoor title in Pentathlon at the beginning of
February 2007, scoring 4146 points. Her sister Michaela finished second on 4014
points. At the International match in Zaragoza just two weeks earlier, she had
placed 3rd with 4144 points, well ahead of her sister.

Come summer,
after placing second in the European Cup 1st Division (56.20), Zuzana gained a
bronze medal from the U23 European Championships in Debrecen, Hungary, but
despite recording 55.93, she was not satisfied with third place. “I believed I
could have run faster,” she said. “I was thinking of a time around 55.50.”

The young
Czech athlete, who also likes reading books, playing the piano and travelling,
qualified for the 400m Hurdles at the World Championships in Osaka.

The record
came at the end of August, in the Osaka semi-finals. “Finally, I got the
national record after waiting for it the whole season,” Hejnova wrote in her
diary. “In the first semi-final heat, despite the time of 55.04, I finished
only sixth and did not qualify. But I am very happy. I improved my PB by
0.79s.” At the beginning of the season she was thinking of a time on around
55.18, so she was surprised at the achievement. “Now I believe I am able to run
sub 55 seconds,” she said.

And she was
right. At the beginning of 2008, Hejnova first improved her indoor PB on 400m
flat to 52.82 in Prague, then she competed at the World Indoor Championships,
in Valencia, clocking 53.16 in the semi-finals of the 400m and helping the
Czech squad to her country’s best result at this championships, finishing 4th
with the women´s 4x400m.

On 12 June,
at the Golden Spike meeting in Ostrava, Hejnova achieved 54.96 and qualified for
the Olympics in Beijing in a national record.

The Olympic
400m hurdles were the consecration of the then 22-year-old Czech athlete. “I
really wanted to go to Beijing and during all that year I worked very hard to
get the flight ticket,” she stated. Zuzana Hejnova did not disappoint the Czech
team. In the final she finished seventh with 54.97, only one hundredth behind
her personal best of that time.

After a
successful summer season, the winter 2008-2009 brought some health problems.
Zuzana had to handle a tonsils operation, which ended with some other health
complications. After a training camp in South Africa, she returned to the
freezing Czech weather and turned sick again for a month. For all these
reasons, Hejnova did not have good indoor season 2009.

The fruits of
hard spring preparation and the first national record improvement in 2009 came
on 7 July at the IAAF GP in Lausanne. The time, 54.94, was 0.02s better than
the one achieved in 2008 in Ostrava. However, the next national record did not wait
long to come. Only three weeks after the Swiss meeting, Hejnova started at the Super
Grand Prix meeting in Monaco. The new Czech record mark was changed into 54.90,
despite the fact that Hejnova took “only” seventh place. “I think that if I had
better lane, not the first one, I would have run even faster,” the national
record breaker was quoted at the meeting. The paradox was that the multiple
Czech record holder did not have any national title from her event. “I will run
400 meters flat at the national championships. It is less tiring for me and
there is better competition on this event,” said the 400m hurdles specialist.

Despite the
fact that Zuzana broke the 55 seconds barrier in the semifinals of the World
Championships in Berlin for the third time in the season, she did not make it
into the final. She was fourth in her semi, 13 hundredths of a second from a
final spot. "What can I say? I'm very disappointed. I could have made it.
There was no need to run too fast. If I am aware of mistakes? Not really. I ran
well, smoothly, but slowly. I spoiled it for myself, it was a huge
chance," she regretted.

The year 2010
started with a successful return of the 400m relay at the World Indoor
Championships, in Doha. The Czech quartet (Rosolova, Bartonickova, Bergrova a
Hejnova) took fourth place again in 3:30.05, but because of doping in the
Jamaican medal team, they were later awarded the bronze. For Zuzana it was like
a substitute for the individual race, where she was the first behind the
qualification line in the heats with the time of 53.56 and overall finished 13th.

Her first big
chance for the senior (individual) medal was close, at the European
Championships in Barcelona, where she ended just off the podium, in fourth
place. Although she ran well and confirmed that times below 55 seconds are not
a problem for her anymore, even clocking the second-fastest time in her career,
54.30 - in the season she had improved to 54.13 NR already - was not enough for
the medal; she lost it by 12 hundredths. "I've run out of power at the
end. I'm sorry," she said after the race.

2010 however
was a positive year for Hejnova, who had her first strong season at
international level and took the second place in the Diamond League Standings
at her event. The same result came in the national polls for Athlete of the
year 2010.

During
winter, Zuzana used to choose the 400 meters flat as her additional event. In
2011, however, she seriously devoted her efforts to pentathlon. After her
success in the Four Nations match in Reims, where she was second only to French
specialist Antoinette Nana Djimou with 4406 points, she decided to participate
in the European Indoor Championships in the pentathlon.

In the first
three events she set personal bests, but in long jump she had two faults and
only in the third attempt recorded 5.73. The final seventh place, with the
total of 4453 points, meant a new PB again. "I will not specialise in
pentathlon and I admire the girls who do this event. I will again continue in
my hurdles," she laughed in the mixed zone.

In her first
start outdoors in 2011, on 4 June, the athlete coached at the time by Martina
Blazkova attacked her own national record (from 2010) running 54.26, just 13
hundredths slower, at the Diamond League meeting in Eugene, finishing in fourth
place. With this time she also easily qualified for the World Championships in
Daegu, Korea. The excellent performance from Eugene was followed by victory at
400m hurdles at the next Diamond League meeting in Oslo, on 9 June. Zuzana
clocked 54.38 and four days later, in Prague, she added the next victory,
achieving 54.44 at the Odlozil memorial.

Zuzana
Hejnova then showed one of the best performances within the Czech team at the
European Team Championships in Stockholm on 18 June, breaking the national
record with 53.87. "Actually I did not expect that today it could be so
good. I felt tired and sleepy. Natalya Antyukh started quickly, but I was
faster in the finish," said a happy Hejnova. Her previous record was
improved by 26 hundredths. "Now I'd like to stabilise my performance at
around 54 seconds, and if it should even fall down to 53.5, it would be very
good," she said.

It did not
take too long before Hejnova fulfilled her aims. In the French capital she won
the second race in a row within the Diamond League and improved her own
national best at 400m hurdles, achieving the then world leading mark of 53.29.
“My coach Martina Blazkova is here with me and my boyfriend and a few friends
too. It helped me a lot,” said the excited 24-year-old athlete on 8 July. “I
was very motivated and wanted to show them a great performance in Paris.”

Coming to
Daegu as a number two in the world rankings at that time (behind Jamaican Kaliese Spencer,
52.79), Hejnova hoped for a great result in Daegu.

Zuzana
managed to get to the final but was disappointed about the seventh place.
“Unfortunately, I was very tired in the last metres and could not speed up. To
be sixth or seventh – it is not a big difference,” the 24-year-old described
after running 54.23 in the World Championships final. She repeated the same
placement in the relays after the team of Rosolová, Bergrová, Bartoničková and
Hejnová took seventh place at 4x400m in 3:26.57.

Zuzana, whose
biggest sport hero is Allison Felix, decided to skip indoor competitions in
2012 to focus only on Olympic Games. Despite this fact, she took part in some
combined event competitions and won the national indoor title at 400 m.

In her first
outdoor competition, the Ostrava Golden Spike meeting on 25 May, Zuzana
fulfilled the Olympic standard to start at her second Olympic Games by running
55.28. The next success came on 11 June at the Odlozil Memorial in Prague where
she ran a new meet record, 54.43. “I am sure now I am on the right
way towards Olympics,” stated the 25-year-old athlete based in Prague.

But the big
disappointment came at the European Championships, in Helsinki, where Hejnova
had golden ambitions. She missed the bronze medal by 14 hundredths and the
silver went to her team mate, newborn hurdler, Denisa Rosolova. “It seems
I forgot how to run. I do not know what was going on. I trained
well; I feel well and still cannot perform well at the competition.
I hope I can break this spell in London,” she cried. A few days
later, she made her day by winning the next big bronze in 4x400 relay with her teammates,
all from the training group of Martina Blazkova - Zuzana Bergrova, Jitka
Bartoničkova and Denisa Rosolova. “I did not believe in a medal, so this is
just awesome,” Zuzana added.

The fourth
place from Helsinki was forgotten once Zuzana appeared at the Diamond League
meet in Monaco on 20 July, her last outing before leaving for the London
Olympics. She triumphed in a season best of 54.12 and improved her
self-confidence. “I did not manage it well in Helsinki. Mentally, I feel ready
now and first of all, I want to enjoy the Olympic Games in London and I am sure
I can surprise everyone,” Zuzana confessed.

In London,
she finally achieved her first medal from an individual event. In the final,
she finished third clocking 53.38 behind Natalya Antyukh and LaShinda Demus.
“It is almost unbelievable. Before, I even did not believe that I could win the
Olympic medal one day because everybody is so well prepared for the Olympics.
But here, I told to myself: It has to change finally; I should not have bad
luck anymore.”

After the
season, she left her coach Martina Blazkova and her sparing-partner Denisa
Rosolova for new club Dukla Praha and started cooperation with Dalibor Kupka, a
former coach of the Olympic champion in Decathlon, Roman Sebrle, and of the
European 400m champion Pavel Maslak. From the all-female training group she
moved to the group composed of only men. “I felt that I needed a change. Girls
are gossiping much more. With boys it is more fun during the training, we are a
bigger team,” she confessed and admitted that she has never been so
self-confident before. “Before, I went to the start with a fear and tied up. No
I just go there and I do not think about the words “must” or “must not”. I only
look forward to the competition.”

Training where
they experimented quite a lot with her former coach, changed to training with a
strict set program. And it bore its fruits in the form of her lifetime best
results under the leadership of coach Kupka. She won all eight competitions she
entered at 400m hurdles before the World Championships, including five Diamond
league meetings. “I deserve the best marks for the first half of the season,”
she praised herself. “It is because I did not lose any competition and for
every improvement of my personal best. But the certificate will be given only
after Moscow.”

She also improved
her own national record twice this year. The first time, at the Diamond League
in Paris, she improved to 53.23 and then in London on 26 June to 53.07. In the
IAAF Diamond League 2013 overall standings she sits on the first place without
any opponent anymore.

She leaves
for the IAAF World Championships in Moscow as the world´s fastest hurdler this
season and still claims: „I believe that I still spare the fastest time
for the Moscow competition.”

“Because of
athletics, I maybe lost some contacts with my friends but on the other hand,
sport gives me a good feeling about myself, it teaches me to be systematic and
increases my self-confidence. And because I like travelling, I am always
looking forward to every foreign trip. I wish I would visit Malaysia once more
and I would like to know Japan and China better,” the Czech record holder
confessed.